Date
  1. Alaska-Based Small Research Aircraft Availability
    Northern Science Services
    Fairbanks, Alaska

  2. Radio Episode Available
    Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape
    World Ocean Radio- Online

  3. Arctic Science TV Series Available
    Frontier Scientists Season Two
    Alaska Public Media


  1. Alaska-Based Small Research Aircraft Availability
    Northern Science Services
    Fairbanks, Alaska

Northern Science Services (NorSS), LLC, based in Fairbanks, Alaska is
seeking airborne science collaborations in Alaska. The company has
experience and is willing and able to comply with NOAA, NASA, DOI, and
NSF aircraft/pilot requirements for the ABoVE, SnowEx, and other
campaigns.

Northern Science Services operates Cessnas (C172, C182) on wheels,
floats, and skis that have been modified and FAA-approved for equipment
such as cameras (optical, NIR, Thermal IR), radars, lidar,
meteorological sensors, and imaging and air chemistry spectrometers.
Some of these payloads are available through the University of Alaska
Fairbanks and/or NorSS, LLC.

Northern Science Services also has the capability of completing data
processing for researchers including: orthomosaics, airborne chemistry
maps, and digital surface maps.

For more information, go to:
http://norss.us/?page_id=147.

For questions or to discuss collaboration, please contact:
Jessica Cherry
Email:jessie [at] norss.us


  1. Radio Episode Available
    Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape
    World Ocean Radio- Online

World Ocean Radio announces online availability of the radio episode titled
"Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape." The episode
features Arctic Nature writer Barry Lopez.

Episode Summary: In this fourth and final episode in a series on writers
who have shaped his interest in the ocean and the natural world, host
Peter Neill discusses the work of American author, essayist, and fiction
writer Barry Lopez, whose Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a
Northern Landscape
stands as a classic--one of the most encompassing
and evocative portraits of a natural place ever written.

To access, go to:
http://tinyurl.com/barry-lopez-arctic-writer.

For questions, please contact:
Trisha Badger
Email: tbadger [at] thew2o.net.


  1. Arctic Science TV Series Available
    Frontier Scientists Season Two
    Alaska Public Media

Alaska Public Media announces upcoming showtimes for an Arctic Science
Television Series called Frontier Scientists. Frontier Scientists shares
the Arctic's newest discoveries. Frontier Scientists visits Alaska's
living laboratories and highlights the work of modern scientists,
bringing their findings to the forefront of your TV screen.

KAKM, Anchorage PBS Station, Channel 7 broadcasts Frontier Scientists
Season Two on Wednesdays, 8:00 pm AKDT.

Upcoming Programs Include:

June 22nd, "Polar Bears": Often, polar bears seem to disappear in their
frozen environment. Other times they're among a crowd ravaging a whale
bone pile. Polar bear behavior continues to astound scientists Karyn
Rode, George Durner, Todd Atwood, Tony Pagano, Jeff Welker, and Matt
Rogers. Learn how they discovered the 400 mile non-stop swim of one bear
and hear from the scientists what's already known, and yet to be
learned, about the plight of the mighty polar bear.

June 29th, "Sea Ice": Scientists Andy Mahoney and Jeremy Kasper enjoy
the sensation of standing on the Beaufort Sea. Drilling cores, measuring
the salinity of ice, looking back at historical records of ice depth,
and talking to Barrow locals all help measure the diminishing Arctic sea
ice and track its changes. The 30-below temperatures challenge all
aspects of the research.

July 6th, "From Snowscapes to Ice Crystals, The Arctic is White": Snow
can define the Arctic, but snow conditions can be intensely diverse
depending on where you stand. Scientist Matt Sturm knows snow from his
cross continent trek, from studying magnified ice crystals and from
conducting the longest study of snow melt in the Arctic at Imnavait
Creek. Alessio Gusmeroli explains snow melt's changeable characteristics
at Imnavait.

For more information on Alaska Public Media, go to:
http://www.alaskapublic.org/.

This work is supported and produced through a National Science
Foundation Grant.

For questions, please contact:
Liz O'Connell
Email: wondervision2 [at] yahoo.com


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